The term refers to the cotton-producing region of the United States during the 19th century. This area, primarily encompassing the states of the Deep South, experienced significant economic growth and societal transformation directly linked to the cultivation of this particular crop. It exemplified a plantation-based economy heavily reliant on enslaved labor for its profitability and expansion.
The region’s economic prosperity became deeply intertwined with the institution of slavery. The high demand for cotton, fueled by the textile industry in both the North and Great Britain, incentivized the expansion of cotton plantations and, consequently, the increased demand for enslaved Africans. This economic system solidified the social and political power of the planter elite and created a stark social hierarchy based on race and class. This dynamic exacerbated tensions between the North and South, ultimately contributing to the outbreak of the Civil War.